Kim Chang-han was the brainchild behind PlayerUnknowns Battlegrounds, or PUBG, in 2017.
Kim Chang-han, a former child computer prodigy who won national coding competitions in South Korea in the 1980s, had reached his lowest point. It was 2014, and he d just laid off a third of the employees at his gaming startup. Since 2000, he d created three multiplayer online games at three startups that all fell flat.
“That was the darkest time in my life,” Kim, 46, recalled. The following year, he sold his firm to the company now known as Krafton Inc., which he joined as an executive producer.
Then his fortunes began to change. As a last attempt to succeed in the business, he decided to make what s known as a battle royale game, an online game where players compete against one another in an ever-shrinking battlefield to be the last person standing. “Every fiber in my being was telling me to make this game,” he said.
Synopsis
The IPO could value the startup at as much as 30 trillion won ($27.2 billion), according to a Jan. 5 report by Eugene Investment & Securities Co.
South Korea is set to raise as much as $10.9 billion, a record, through more than 120 IPOs this year, according to Eugene Investment & Securities Co.
Kim Chang-han, a former child computer prodigy who won national coding competitions in South Korea in the 1980s, had reached his lowest point.
It was 2014, and he’d just laid off a third of the employees at his gaming startup. Since 2000, he’d created three multiplayer online games at three startups that all fell flat.